Since its first edition in February 2012, when we discussed the topic of the “Arab Spring” and the role of new technologies in a series of civil revolutions in the Arab world, the POINT conference has devoted much of its agenda to refer to the Middle East and North Africa region.
A decade has passed since a series of civil protests took place in North African countries, which led to changes of government in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and other countries. It all started in Tunisia, in December 2010, and continued into the spring of the following year in Egypt, Libya, to name a few. The world still remembers images from the protests that took place in Tahrir Square in Cairo in the days before the fall of Hosni Mubarak’s regime, but also footage of the overthrow of Muammar al-Gaddafi in Libya.
The POINT conference addressed a number of topics ranging from mobilizing and organizing civil protests using new technologies and social networks, monitoring the responsibility of newly elected authorities in countries where regimes have changed, to fighting violent extremism online, or government attitudes towards civil society in the Middle East and North Africa.
The next Point Talks will look at these events from today’s perspective, a decade after the “Arab Spring”, with interlocutors from several countries.
On May 21st, at 1 pm CET, as part of the POINT Talks, we will talk with Samar Elhussieny, Egyptian researcher and human rights defender; Dr Sawsan Gharaibeh, Co-Founder of Transparency International Jordan; Julien Courson, Executive Director of Lebanese Transparency Association; Wisam Jaafar, AIN Network General Secretary – Iraq, and Ahmed Samih, civil rights activist from Egypt who will also moderate this panel discussion.
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